Author: admin

10 most often commands used at your linux box..
Run the following command to see which are the 10 most often commands you use at your linux box.
#history | cut -c 8- | cut -f1 -d” ” | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -n10

If your partition is FAT32, you can mount using vfat adding the line below in /etc/fstab file:
/dev/hda?? /media/windows vfat rw,user,umas=000 auto 0 0

Changing /dev/hda?? by you partition.

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Command line history, I/O redirection, and piping
* history [options] – to display the command line history.
* key – to complete a partially typed file/directory name or command.
* <↑> / <↓> keys – to navigate the command history buffer.
* ; – to separate multiple commands on a single line. Ffor example command1 ; command2.
* >,>> – to redirect the output of a command. For example ls -la directoryname > myfile.txt will write the output of the ls command to the file myfile.txt (and not to the screen!) while overwriting any previous contents of the file. If >> is used instead of > the original contents of the file myfile.txt will not be ereased but the output of ls will be appended to it.
* < – to use a specific file as an input to a command. For example cpio [options] < filenamelistfile.txt
* | – to pipe the output of one command to another command. Ffor example ls -al directoryname | less.

# nohup commandname [arguments] – to run a command, with a non-tty output, that should continue running after exiting the prompt.
# nice [options] commandname [arguments] – to run a program with modified scheduling priority.
# renice priority [options] – to alter the priority of a running process.
# & – to put a job in the background (for example emacs mytext.txt &).
# bg [jobspec] – to resume the suspended job jobspec in the background as if it had been started with &.
# fg [jobspec] – to put the specified job in the foreground (to make it the current job).